This document provides instructions for an activity where students will be divided into groups and each group will examine how a specific productivity tool can be used for classroom management, attendance tasks, and other productivity tasks. Each group will be assigned a tool to evaluate and will answer questions in a shared spreadsheet about the tool's potential uses. The group facilitator will fill in their column of the spreadsheet. The completed spreadsheet will then be posted to the instructor's website.
How to Troubleshoot Apps for the Modern Connected Worker
Week 10 handsonactivity
1. Hands on activity:
productivity tools and tasks
• The purpose of this task is to challenge you to think
about a tool in different ways
o Can something that you think of as a tool usually used for
“content exploration” tasks also something that can assist
you with classroom management? With attendance? With
other productivity-related tasks?
o You will think of this one tool and how it can be used (or not
used – be prepared to justify this, though!) in the three
categories I have mentioned earlier
EDUC W200 Week 10
2. Hands on activity:
productivity tools and tasks
• Your instructor will divide you into 5 groups
o Each group will be given a tool and you will be asked to
examine that one tool using a
Example spreadsheet for this class (Note to Instructors: you
may want to save a new one for your class)
o The spreadsheet has a series of questions you are to answer
about the tool
o Select a group facilitator to fill in your column
o Only answer in your group’s column (the tool to which you
are assigned
• Post this Google Spreadsheet to your Teacher
Website -> Tech Resources page
EDUC W200 Week 10
The purpose of this task is to challenge you to think about a tool in different ways Can something that you think of as a tool usually used for “content exploration” tasks also something that can assist you with classroom management? With attendance? With other productivity-related tasks? You will think of this one tool and how it can be used (or not used – be prepared to justify this, though!) in the three categories I have mentioned earlier